if you want to see how JETS neutralized Bills' pass rush (or lack of) and how Sanchez was able to throw so well, read this article... excellent analysis. http://www.wgr550.com/pages/14214214.php?contentType=4&contentId=11410453
Excellent analysis of the passing plays & protection! Better yet, not 1 got-d@mn word written about Te(blow)me!!!
So Sparano had an excellent plan to exploit the Bills shitty secondary and avoid their pass rush with quick passes and the players executed it very well. It won't be this easy every week, but it was a very nice debut for Sparano and the players in this system. The Bills are fucked.
No that I disagree with most of that article, but this is confusing: " The All-22 shows us a Jets team with a good gameplan." This guy got access to the All-22? If so, why didn't he give us screenshot of any All-22 footage? That looks like screenshots from the television broadcast.
Probably he's referring to the all-22 he got from nfl rewind. That's not exactly the all-22 that coaches use (which i believe is from a sky cam; you should have seen a few glimpses of it when QBs return to the sideline, and talk over with OC with huge pic of the huddle and a few more pictures after it.)
You can buy All-22 this year I believe for $80 or something. Maybe he zoomed in but I remember it saying download telestrator in the announcement.
Well done.....Bill will be in hell against the Pats if they don't change the Mae plan. Way to go Sparano. Oh what a good OC can do for a team.
I just looked it up, 69.99. Looks like I'll be dropping another 70 bones on the NFL this year. Which is actually more than I'm paying for Sunday Ticket, but oh well.
This may be the biggest upgrade from Schotty to Sparano; having a coach that understands how to win match-ups.
Actually, from the analyzed plays at least, there was't too much 'advanced' concept to confuse Sanchez - that was encouraging. It was all straight up beat-your-man type of concept. The only element I saw that was in action was smash - and Bills played it thoroughly wrong, giving Holmes free release at 15 yard range. Other than that, no triangle stretch, vertical/horizontal stretch or weakside flood of these sort. I would have to guess that either Sparano's version of E/P playbook does not feature these kind of stretching element, (I believe this is a remote possibility - when he called the shots at Dallas, Cowboys featured Glenn and Owens at the outside, and Witten on the inside, practically negating the need for these) or Sparano dumbed it down for the first year. (That Sparano actually used smash concept draws me to this side in fact;clearly he knows them. Maybe some. Probably all. Just he's not using them as of yet.) Either way, it's clear (up till this point) that Sparano knows how to attack a given defense. No more confused offensive crews shooting themselves on their collective feet. Thank you, Jesus!
The Jets had a gameplan that involved exposing the corners. Already light years ahead of Shotty's system.
We all thought very strongly that Schotty was a major part of the problem and we are going to be proved right. I haven't seen pass plays like that for the Jets in years. They made it look simple and guess what - it is simple. Design quick plays that get receivers open and Sanchez needs to pick the open receiver or the one in single coverage. Simply don't throw the ball to a double covered receiver. Schottys offense was based on too many variables. Schotty ball is available at your nearest giant Arch!